Jessica Pegula advances to the third round in Wuhan with a tight win over BaptisteNew Foto - Jessica Pegula advances to the third round in Wuhan with a tight win over Baptiste

WUHAN, China (AP) — Jessica Pegula was twice broken while serving for the match in the third set but recovered to edge Hailey Baptiste in a tight tiebreaker Wednesday and advance at the Wuhan Open. Sixth-seeded Pegula beat her fellow American 6-4, 4-6, 7-6 (6) on her seventh match point to reach the third round. Pegula, wholost in the China Open semifinalslast week, will next play ninth-seeded Ekaterina Alexandrova, who beat American Ann Li 7-6 (5), 6-2. No. 3Coco Gauff, coming off a semifinal loss to eventualchampion Amanda Anisimova at the China Openlast week, breezed into the next round with a 6-1, 6-0 win over Moyuka Uchijima in 51 minutes. No. 16 Liudmila Samsonova rallied to beat 2020 Australian Open champion Sofia Kenin 3-6, 6-3, 6-1, and qualifier Kateřina Siniaková beat Maya Joint 6-3, 6-1. U.S. Open championAryna Sabalenka and 11th-seeded Naomi Osaka were scheduled to play later Wednesday. Top-ranked Sabalenka, who took a Greek holiday after her second consecutive win at Flushing Meadows, withdrew from last week's China Open, another WTA 1000-level event. "I feel good," Sabalenka said on her arrival in Wuhan. "I just didn't want to rush my body into the tournament. So I think we made the right decision to take extra time for recovery and for the preparation. Physically, I feel ready to go." Sabalenka has had an amazing run in Wuhan — her record is 17-0 while winning titles in 2018, 2019 and 2024. ___ AP tennis:https://apnews.com/hub/tennis

Jessica Pegula advances to the third round in Wuhan with a tight win over Baptiste

Jessica Pegula advances to the third round in Wuhan with a tight win over Baptiste WUHAN, China (AP) — Jessica Pegula was twice broken while...
Yankees need strong encore from Cam Schlittler to extend ALDS againNew Foto - Yankees need strong encore from Cam Schlittler to extend ALDS again

NEW YORK -- A monster performance by Aaron Judge allowed the New York Yankees to keep their season going. It also provided them a chance to get rookie Cam Schlittler another opportunity at making a postseason start. Schlittler will be on the mound Wednesday night when the Yankees host the Toronto Blue Jays and attempt to even the American League Division Series at two wins apiece. The Blue Jays will employ a bullpen game, with Louis Varland serving as the opener after he endured an ugly relief outing on Tuesday. The Yankees are trying to overcome a two-games-to-none deficit in the best-of-five division series for the third time. They achieved the feat in 2001 against the Athletics and in 2017 against Cleveland. Judge is 7-for-11 in the series after going 3-for-4 with four RBIs in New York's 9-6 win on Tuesday. The two-time MVP helped keep the Yankees alive by hitting a tying three-run homer in the fourth inning off Varland. He also made a diving catch in right field in the fifth inning, and he scored on a sacrifice fly by Ben Rice in the sixth. "Tonight was special, but there's still more work to be done," Judge said after the Tuesday contest. "Hopefully we have some more cool moments like this the rest of the postseason. We've got another big game tomorrow night." Judge helped the Yankees overcome a 6-1 deficit, improving his average to .500 (11-for-22) in six playoff games this season. He also is 4-for-6 with runners in scoring position in the postseason. Including the playoffs, Judge is batting .397 (48-for-121) with 14 homers and 27 RBIs over his past 36 games since Aug. 27. "It was the best-player-in-the-game type (of) performance," Yankees manager Aaron Boone said. "It was special when obviously, needless to say, we're backs against the wall and then some in a Game 3 situation. " The Blue Jays hit .392 and scored 23 runs in the first two games at Toronto, but they mustered just two hits in the final five innings of Game 3. Errors by second baseman Isiah Kiner-Falefa and third baseman Addison Barger set up four runs for the Yankees. Blue Jays slugger Vladimir Guerrero Jr. hit a two-run homer in the first inning and is 8-for-13 with eight RBIs and five runs in the series. Ernie Clement had four hits and is 7-for-11 in the series, but the Blue Jays struck out 11 times. George Springer went 0-for-5 with three strikeouts, and Alejandro Kirk was 0-for-4. "It just goes to show if you leave your foot off the gas for even a second, a good team will pounce on you and make stuff happen," Clement said. Schlittler will take the mound after a historic 12-strikeout performance in eight innings during a 4-0 win over the Boston Red Sox in Game 3 of the AL wild-card series on Thursday. The 24-year-old right-hander threw 107 pitches and allowed five hits in his postseason debut, becoming the first pitcher in major league history to toss at least eight scoreless innings and fan at least 12 without allowing a walk in a postseason game. Since making his major league debut on July 9, Schlittler had his worst start on Sept. 5 in a home game against the Blue Jays. He lasted 1 2/3 innings, allowing four runs on five hits in a 7-1 loss. Toronto batters fouled off 24 of Schlittler's 66 pitches. "It was impressive how many foul balls there were, but I think I'm a different pitcher now than I was when I faced them a month ago and now even from two weeks ago," Schlittler said Tuesday afternoon. "They had a good game plan that day and they were able to foul a lot of balls off and work my count. Going into tomorrow, just making sure that I can make those adjustments and get the weak contact that I'm looking for." Schlittler also pitched in New York's lone win in Toronto this year, on July 22. In that outing, he allowed two runs on seven hits in five innings for a no-decision, throwing 90 pitches in the Yankees' 5-4 victory. Toronto heads into a bullpen game one day after using six relievers -- Mason Fluharty, Varland, Braydon Fisher, Brendon Little, Yariel Rodriguez and Tommy Nance -- to cover 5 1/3 innings. Every Blue Jays reliever except Justin Bruihl, Jeff Hoffman and Rodriguez has pitched at least twice in the series. Varland got three outs on Tuesday, but he served up Judge's tying homer in the fourth inning and Jazz Chisholm Jr.'s go-ahead blast in the fifth. Eric Lauer is expected to serve as the Blue Jays' bulk reliever. The left-hander allowed three hits while getting only one out in the seventh inning on Sunday. He has faced the Yankees in the regular season just once in his career, when he threw 5 1/3 innings of one-run ball for a win in 2019. "These guys will be ready to go," Toronto manager John Schneider said. "It's really comforting for me to see them do that all year. I know they're going to do it again and you have to take out the outside noise that comes with playing here and all that kind of stuff." --Larry Fleisher, Field Level Media

Yankees need strong encore from Cam Schlittler to extend ALDS again

Yankees need strong encore from Cam Schlittler to extend ALDS again NEW YORK -- A monster performance by Aaron Judge allowed the New York Ya...
MLB playoffs 2025: With one game-tying swing, Aaron Judge reorients the ALDS vs. Toronto and quiets the October criticsNew Foto - MLB playoffs 2025: With one game-tying swing, Aaron Judge reorients the ALDS vs. Toronto and quiets the October critics

NEW YORK — For four seconds, Aaron Judge, like the rest of us, was transfixed. The Yankees' captain, silent and motionless in a sea of rising decibels, lingered by home plate, waiting. His eyes, wide with anticipation, tracked the white sphere curving through the night air. They held no sign of panic. And then, suddenly, a joyous clang. The ball ricocheted off the foul pole. The reaction, from the crowd, was volcanic. For Judge, predictably, it was business as usual. After delivering the most significant swing of his career thus far —a game-tying, three-run tank that reoriented the complexion of this ALDS vs. Toronto— Judge paused for a beat, discarded his bat, motioned calmly toward his teammates going ballistic in the dugout and began his slow trot around the bases. It was the type of moment Yankees fans had been waiting for, praying for, an exhale of Judge-ian proportions. Perhaps that was the case for the man himself. But in typical fashion, he didn't show it. Although Judge, in the aftermath, clearly understood the significance of it all, he downplayed his own role in the story. "Felt like I made good contact. Thought we had a chance," he said afterNew York's 9-6 victory on Tuesday in Game 3. "You just never know with the wind, if it's gonna push it foul, if it's gonna keep curving or not. I guess a couple of ghosts out there in monument park helped kinda keep that fair." How do you hold something so big and not let it consume you? To thrive in this demanding, unrelenting cauldron called Yankeedom, one must simultaneously appreciate and ignore the significance of it all. That is a complicated, formidable endeavor. The history is unavoidable here, laid on thick and on purpose. Yankee Stadium is a museum with a museum. There's an entire park of monuments. A plaque with Joe DiMaggio's famous quote — "I wanna thank the good lord for making me a Yankee" — hangs in the hallway between clubhouse and dugout. It sounds grandiose, saccharine, overwrought, but love it or hate it, this franchise is the throughline of this pastime's past. History is everywhere here. Itlivesin this place, like a spectral fog trapped beneath the iconic frieze that circles this rebuilt colossus. Judge thoroughly understands this dynamic and the expectations that accompany it, and he floats through it with ease. Jeter wrote the blueprint, but the big guy, in this modern age of always-on, has perfected it. He knows when to smile at the cameras and when to avoid them. What to say and, more importantly, what not to say. As part of this dance, Judge often references the legends who came before him, but he does not, it seems, compare himself to them. That's outside noise, pure distraction, a job for scribes and talking heads. "It's hard to think about it like that. If you carry it around, it's gonna weigh you down," Game 3 starter Carlos Rodón told Yahoo Sports. "If he carried it around, he wouldn't hit .330 with 54 homers. "He just walks in here, and he lives it." [Get more New York news: Yankees team feed] For nine seasons now, that has been the case. Judge has won two AL MVP awards and is in line for a possible third. He has a batting title, 368 career home runs, the largest contract in franchise history, enough fame, fortune and accomplishment for five lifetimes. Yet he is most defined by what he does not have: a championship. Such is life in the Bronx. This is Judge's eighth trip to the playoffs. He has already taken the seventh-most postseason plate appearances in franchise history. If the Yankees win this series, he will soon pass Yogi Berra and Paul O'Neill and move into fifth. But his career October stat line before Tuesday — .223/.333/.454 — was pedestrian, well below his lofty standards. His numbers in situations defined as "high-leverage" were even worse: 3-for-17 with three walks, two singles and a double. As such, he has endured an avalanche of criticism from many corners of YankeeLand for what he hasn't been when the games mattered most. His now-iconic flub in Game 5 of last year's World Series didn't help matters. Fair or not, the "Judge can't handle October" narrative existed, growing in power with every game. But witha timely blast with his team on the brink of elimination, he silenced that chatter, at least for now. Up as the tying run, with his Yankees —his Yankees— down three in the game, down two in the series, staring winter in the face, Judge rose to the moment. With the count 0-2, he turned on a 99.7-mph heater under his hands from Toronto reliever Louis Varland and dispatched it 373 feet into the seats. The drama was made possible only because Toronto jumped to an early 2-0 lead on a stadium-silencing drive from Vladimir Guerrero Jr., their own franchise anchor. Guerrero's homer, his third of the series, was an absolute no-doubter, half warning shot, half hammer blow. But faced with that opening salvo, New York didn't back down. They answered in the bottom half, when Giancarlo Stanton roped an RBI single to plate Judge and trim the deficit to one. That score didn't hold for long. The Jays pounced on Rodón in the top of the third, chasing the southpaw from the game by scoring four runs on four hits to secure what appeared to be a commanding 6-1 lead. But again, the Yankees punched back immediately in the bottom half. A Judge double scored Grisham, a Stanton sac fly scored Bellinger, and suddenly, New York was within striking distance. Those runs set up Judge's game-changing, season-altering, legacy-defining long ball one inning later. The moment felt gigantic in scope and scale, difficult to wrap your arms around. But the grand euphoria was made possible only by the micro, by the millimeter-perfect details of the swing itself and the hours of fine-tuning those details in the cage. Asked to explain, mechanically, what it takes to get to a pitch like that and the work that goes in behind the scenes, Judge let out a "woof," smiled and just shook his head. "We'd be here all night." But Judge's home run merely tied the game. Toronto escaped the fourth without further damage. It wasn't until Jazz Chisholm Jr. unleashed a 409-foot, go-ahead laser off the facing of the second deck that the Yankees and their fans could breathe, smile, relax. The Bombers, in the fifth inning of the third game, had the lead for the first time in this ALDS. They tacked on a few more for comfort's sake — an Austin Wells RBI single, a Bellinger double that scored an intentionally walked Judge — and the bullpen held firm. After Rodón's early exit, New York relievers combined to toss 5 2/3 scoreless innings. In some ways — Aaron Judge's legacy, for instance — Tuesday night felt bigger than a single victory. But for the sake of this series, it was just one win. The Yankees are still trailing. The Jays still hold home-field advantage in this best-of-five. And yet, the tenor of this series changed in Game 3. It felt like an enormous ocean liner beginning to turn. The pitching matchup forGame 4 on Wednesdayfavors the Yankees. Toronto plans to start Varland as the opener of what looks to be a bullpen game. New York will hand the rock to rookie Cam Schlittler, who electrified the sport last weekwith a sparkling, eight-inning, 12-strikeout performance in the wild-card clincher against Boston. A trip back north for an all-deciding Game 5 feels entirely possible, if not likely. "Tonight was special, but there's still more work to be done," Judge proclaimed in his postgame media conference. "Hopefully we have some more cool moments like this the rest of the postseason. We've got another big game tomorrow night. Maybe we can do something special tomorrow night and talk to all of you all one more time before we head back up north." Injured Yankees ace Gerrit Cole, the only other person on the roster who can begin to comprehend the weight on Judge's shoulders, explained it like this. "He's well aware it's a sick moment," Cole told Yahoo Sports. "But you know, he has a lot of sick moments. It's part of the deal, you know? He just kind of looks at it as an executed swing and moves on." Perhaps that is how Judge does it, by minimizing it all. A swing is just a swing. A win is just a win. Tomorrow, another day. Teammates above all else. Baseball is a process-oriented life, so perhaps committing to those cliches makes it easier to tune out expectations. Maybe walking in and living it, as Rodón put it, lets Judge lessen the weight of his place in history. The ghosts in monument park are only as real as you make them.

MLB playoffs 2025: With one game-tying swing, Aaron Judge reorients the ALDS vs. Toronto and quiets the October critics

MLB playoffs 2025: With one game-tying swing, Aaron Judge reorients the ALDS vs. Toronto and quiets the October critics NEW YORK — For four ...
Analysis-Turkey's gas shift threatens Russia and Iran's last big European marketNew Foto - Analysis-Turkey's gas shift threatens Russia and Iran's last big European market

By Can Sezer ISTANBUL (Reuters) -Turkey could meet more than half of its gas needs by the end of 2028 by ramping up production and increasing U.S. imports, in a shift that threatens to shrink the last major European market for Russian and Iranian suppliers. Washington has publicly pressured allies, including NATO member Turkey, to cut energy ties with Moscow and Tehran. At their White House meeting on September 25, U.S.President Donald Trumppressed Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan to cut Russian energy purchases. Diversifying supply would also strengthen Turkey's energy security and support its ambitions to become a regional gas hub. Ankara aims to re-export imported liquefied natural gas and its own gas production to Europe while burning Russian and Iranian gas domestically, analysts said. "Turkey has been signalling that it will take advantage of the (global) LNG abundance," said Sohbet Karbuz, from the Paris-based Mediterranean Organisation for Energy and Climate. Russia remains Turkey's largest gas supplier, but its share of the market has fallen from more than 60% two decades ago to 37% in the first half of 2025. Most European countries halted imports following Moscow's invasion of Ukraine in 2022. RUSSIA'S PIPELINE CONTRACTS NEAR EXPIRY Russia's long-term pipeline contracts with Turkey to supply 22 billion cubic metres (bcm) annually via the Blue Stream and TurkStream pipelines are close to expiry. Iran's 10 bcm contract expires in the middle of next year, while Azerbaijan's contracts, totalling 9.5 bcm, run until 2030 and 2033. While Turkey is likely to extend some of these contracts, it is likely to seek more flexible terms and smaller volumes to increase the diversity of its supply, Karbuz said. At the same time, Turkey is rapidly expanding alternative sources. State-owned TPAO is boosting output from local gas fields, while state and private companies have expanded LNG import terminals to bring gas in from the U.S. and Algeria. Domestic production and contracted LNG imports are set to exceed 26 bcm annually from 2028 from 15 bcm this year, according to Reuters calculations. US LNG IMPORTS SET TO DOUBLE That would cover more than half of Turkey's gas demand of around 53 bcm, reducing the gap for pipeline imports to around 26 bcm - well below the 41 bcm of current contracted supplies from Russia, Iran and Azerbaijan combined. To support this shift, Turkey has signed a series of LNG deals with U.S. suppliers worth $43 billion, including a 20-year agreement with Mercuria in September. The country has built 58 bcm annual LNG import capacity, enough to cover its entire demand, according to Turkey's energy exchange. Despite this, Russian gas continues to flow at full capacity, and the Kremlin has said cooperation with Ankara remains strong. Since Turkey needs less Russian gas, BOTAS could, in theory, stop imports from Moscow in two to three years, said Alexey Belogoryev of the Moscow-based Institute for Energy and Finance. "However, it won't do so, because Russian gas is price-competitive and creates a surplus that BOTAS can use to pressure other suppliers," Belogoryev said. Turkey's energy minister Alparslan Bayraktar said in a TV interview in October that Turkey must source gas from all available suppliers, including Russia, Iran and Azerbaijan, but noted that U.S. LNG offers cheaper alternatives. The energy ministry declined to comment on future supply deals and pricing. Russian gas pipeline export monopoly Gazprom did not reply to a request for comment. Turkey could burn Russian and Iranian gas at home, export its own production and re-export imported LNG after Europe bans Russian energy imports by 2028, said Karbuz. Turkey's BOTAS has already signed deals to supply Hungary and Romania with small volumes of gas in its bid to become a regional gas trading hub. Beyond gas, Ankara has deep ties with Moscow. Russia's Rosatom is building Turkey's first nuclear plant and Moscow is also the country's top crude and diesel supplier. (Reporting by Can Sezer; Editing by Jonathan Spicer and Louise Heavens)

Analysis-Turkey's gas shift threatens Russia and Iran's last big European market

Analysis-Turkey's gas shift threatens Russia and Iran's last big European market By Can Sezer ISTANBUL (Reuters) -Turkey could meet ...
Analysis-Rising tungsten prices worsen oil drillers' inflation worriesNew Foto - Analysis-Rising tungsten prices worsen oil drillers' inflation worries

By Anushree Mukherjee and Shariq Khan (Reuters) -U.S. shale drillers are facing higher prices for tungsten, a rare, ultra-hard metal used for industrial tools like drillbits, as Chinese export controls have squeezed supply, threatening U.S.President Donald Trump's ambitions to boost America's fossil fuel production. Tungsten makes up as much as 75% of the drillbits deployed in oilfields. The metal's price has surged to over $600 per metric ton unit from around $330–$340 in early February, when Trump imposed a 10% tariff on Chinese goods and Beijing hit back with curbs on exports of five critical metals, including tungsten. While the curbs fall short of an outright ban, previous such measures have sharply curtailed exports. China controls more than two-thirds of global tungsten production, according to the U.S. Geological Survey, making it difficult to replace its supply, industry experts said. As a result, polycrystalline diamond compact (PDC) drill bits, typically priced at $20,000 to $100,000 depending on their size, design and other factors, now cost an additional $3,000 to $25,000, said Yaseer Ismail, supply chain manager at supply chain management firm Scan Global Logistics. PDC drill bits are prized in oilfields for their abrasion resistance, Ismail said. Top U.S. services provider SLB calls them the 'workhorse of the oilfield' on its website. WHEN IT RAINS IT POURS Tungsten costs highlight an unexpected consequence of Trump's policies, despite his campaign promises to uplift the energy industry. Ben Dieterich, a spokesperson for the U.S. Department of Energy, said the department gave a grant this year to Melt Technologies, a Texas company that reclaims and recycles industrial metals, to fund a pilot facility to produce tungsten carbide products. "This will ultimately deliver greater savings for consumers," he said about the grant made in the final days of the administration of former President Joe Biden. The DOE did not immediately respond to a request for comment about the fact that it came during the Biden administration. The American Exploration & Production Council, which represents U.S. energy producers, declined to comment. Since Beijing's retaliation, Trump has slapped even higher duties on Chinese imports, and levied tariffs on other items widely used in oilfields, like steel. The industry also faces a potential oversupply after OPEC+ opted on Sunday to continue raising output after years of cuts. U.S. oil producers have been reducing drilling activity due to declining commodity prices, after output hit record levels in July according to the latest government data. Oilfield service providers will most likely have to absorb U.S. tariff costs instead of passing them on, said Mark Chapman, lead OFS analyst at Enverus Intelligence Research. These companies had warned in their second-quarter earnings reports that the steel tariffs would cut margins by 20 to 50 basis points, and surging tungsten costs will likely have a similar financial impact, Chapman said. SLB said in July it expected to take the hit in the second half of the year, after it reported sharply lower second-quarter earnings from a year ago. Days later, smaller rival Halliburton also posted a large drop in second-quarter profits and warned of a full-year revenue decline, citing softer demand. Global benchmark Brent crude oil futures were trading below $65 a barrel on Tuesday, down over 12% so far this year. "While the industry can generally pass through higher costs, it is challenging to do so in a market with flat to lower activity levels and especially difficult given anticipated pressure on commodity prices," said Samantha Hoh, senior clean tech analyst at HSBC. (Reporting by Anushree Mukherjee in Bengaluru and Shariq Khan in New York; additional reporting by Timothy Gardner in Washington; Editing by Liz Hampton and Richard Chang)

Analysis-Rising tungsten prices worsen oil drillers' inflation worries

Analysis-Rising tungsten prices worsen oil drillers' inflation worries By Anushree Mukherjee and Shariq Khan (Reuters) -U.S. shale drill...

 

AB JRNL © 2015 | Distributed By My Blogger Themes | Designed By Templateism.com